Stabroek News Sunday

The 2017 budget

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took them away with the other. The issue for most such taxpayers is whether or not the adjustment­s were sufficient to distribute the burden of the tax equitably between all income categories. Just as important as the effective tax rate is the impact that the higher rates or charges have on the economy.

Not compulsory

Beyond the income tax, a variety of other taxes are involved. Some affect the quantity of goods and services that could be gotten with the disposable income that households would have in 2017. The principal element of the tax structure is the value-added tax. Others relate to the benefits that taxpayers get for buying certain goods and services from the government. In this latter case, the goods and services include things like passports, driver’s licences, shop licences and other such products or services. One should not ignore them, for while the taxes are not compulsory, they are essential to the conduct of business. They therefore shape the attitude of investors and how they would respond to the taxes.

Persons who buy those goods and services have been forming their own opinions about the increase in fees. Many have concluded that the fee increase for things like passports, vehicle registrati­on licences and liquor licences was not influenced by inflation alone. The fee increases were seen as too steep to be explained by a desire to bring prices in line with current recovery costs. For those persons, the question is whether or not the service that they get from the government is worth the money that they pay for the service. Naturally, taxpayers will be looking for far better service from government department­s with the new fees proposed in the 2017 budget.

Incidence of tax

One of the things that is often discussed when taxation is involved is the incidence of the tax.

This refers to who bears the burden of any taxes imposed. Typically, the burden is distribute­d between the two key groups that make up the private sector, households and businesses. One has also got to acknowledg­e the role that the government plays in the exchange of goods and services. The conflict is not that simple in an economy like Guyana’s since participan­ts in the market where some of the taxes occur include important public sector entities like Guyana Power and Light and Guyana Water Inc.

The incidence of the VAT has been the subliminal message of all the public comments that have been made about the budget. To discuss this issue with reason, one has got to segregate the taxpayers into three parts, namely the low-income, the middle-income and the high-income.

The discussion has already shown that the low-income workers with insufficie­nt income at hand obviously spend all of their money. They are unlikely to change their behaviour because they have nothing to lose. Further, since the only tax that will affect them is the VAT, and VAT has been lowered, spending by this category of workers will not be adversely affected. They can be expected to continue carrying the burden.

Despite being made to carry a higher share of the income taxes, persons in the middle-income bracket should have enough money to continue meeting their expenditur­e needs. For them, much depends on the price elasticity of the products that they buy. Judging from the additional income required to make the low-income workers better off, the same conclusion could be drawn for the highincome earners. They too would be able to meet their expenditur­e needs and one could expect very little change in their spending.

Wider economy

The wider economy could be affected adversely through another economic mechanism. The reduction in disposable income would be most likely to affect the level of personal savings by the middle and high-income taxpayers. This represents the first challenge to the economy. Personal savings are normally used for investment purposes. Households put their money in the bank or they might purchase shares in the stock market. The money that goes into the banks could also be borrowed by someone to engage in direct investment. Either way, savings play a big role in private investment and lower amounts available for deposit mean that the price of money could rise. In the first instance, banks would have to raise their interest rates to attract into their deposits the reduced amount of money in circulatio­n.

With the amount of loanable funds in decline, the banks would have to increase their lending rates. One noticed too that the amount of non-performing loans has been increasing which means that banks would be likely to insist on more stringent lending conditions.

The combined effect of stringent lending conditions and a decline in loanable funds could result in higher cost of funds. Since the price of money would rise for the private direct investor, the price of goods and services would most likely increase as well. Clearly, one or the other, or both, would be likely to produce adverse effects for the economy. Either way, the reduction in disposable income could lead to a loss in national welfare.

Fastest increase

This observatio­n is not a theoretica­l one. The level of consumer spending is something that one must always take into account when addressing the Guyana

economy. In Guyana, consumer spending accounts for over 60 per cent of gross domestic product. This means that spending by households leads to the fastest increase in GDP. Anything that interferes with that speed would have an adverse effect on the economy.

A major challenge of the Guyana economy is its small internal market. That market can only grow with an expanding population whose income is also growing. Faster population growth or migration might aid that effort, but could take long to do so. It will not happen for 2017.

However, there are artificial ways of increasing the internal market at a fast pace and one is through tourism. Tourists satisfy both conditions of an immediate increase in the number of consumers and additional income to spend. Tourism with large peaks and troughs does not offer the sustainabi­lity that is necessary.

It is both seasonal and temporary. A different type of tourist tends to come to Guyana to shop. Those tourists are more consistent in their arrivals and departures. Their behaviour is predictabl­e. At the moment, spending by that type of tourist is estimated to amount to 10 per cent of the spending by households and about seven per cent of GDP. The more they come and the longer they keep coming the better it is for Guyana. Where domestic household demand declines, tourist demand picks up. The budget does not acknowledg­e this reality and could be missing an important way of using a special form of tourism to stimulate the economy.

Broader effort

Government’s role is to create an enabling environmen­t for the private sector to flourish. Creating the enabling environmen­t is not only about providing subsidies and other incentives. It is also about ensuring that obstacles do not necessaril­y stand in the way of the success of the private investor. There is need for public institutio­ns to work well and effectivel­y. It is also about enabling private initiative to do things better and faster. It is also about enabling private investors to be competitiv­e. These institutio­nal weaknesses that the 2017 budget seeks to modify should not be ignored. They are important to improving competitiv­eness. However, it should be kept in mind that as broad an effort as possible is needed to expand the Guyana economy. This writer expects this broader effort will reveal itself throughout 2017.

It is with that optimistic outlook that I seek to wish all Guyanese, especially readers of the Sunday Stabroek Business Page, a Merry Christmas.

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